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GETFACL(1) FreeBSD General Commands Manual GETFACL(1)
NAMEgetfacl -- get ACL information
SYNOPSISgetfacl [-dhinqv] [file...]
DESCRIPTION
The getfacl utility writes discretionary access control information asso-
ciated with the specified file(s) to standard output. If the getconf(1)
utility indicates that {_POSIX_ACL_EXTENDED} is not in effect for a file
then the standard discretionary access permissions are interpreted as an
ACL containing only the required ACL entries.
The following option is available:
-d The operation applies to the default ACL of a directory instead
of the access ACL. An error is generated if a default ACL cannot
be associated with file. This option is not valid for NFSv4
ACLs.
-h If the target of the operation is a symbolic link, return the ACL
from the symbolic link itself rather than following the link.
-i For NFSv4 ACLs, append numerical ID at the end of each entry con-
taining user or group name. Ignored for POSIX.1e ACLs.
-n Display user and group IDs numerically rather than converting to
a user or group name. Ignored for POSIX.1e ACLs.
-q Do not write commented information about file name and ownership.
This is useful when dealing with filenames with unprintable char-
acters.
-v For NFSv4 ACLs, display access mask and flags in a verbose form.
Ignored for POSIX.1e ACLs.
The following operand is available:
file A pathname of a file whose ACL shall be retrieved. If file is
not specified, or a file is specified as -, then getfacl reads a
list of pathnames, each terminated by one newline character, from
the standard input.
EXIT STATUS
The getfacl utility exits 0 on success, and >0 if an error occurs.
EXAMPLES
getfacl /
Retrieve ACL for the directory /.
getfacl -d /
Retrieve the default ACL for the directory /, if any.
SEE ALSOsetfacl(1), acl(3), getextattr(8), setextattr(8), acl(9), extattr(9)STANDARDS
The getfacl utility is expected to be IEEE Std 1003.2c compliant.
HISTORY
Extended Attribute and Access Control List support was developed as part
of the TrustedBSD Project and introduced in FreeBSD 5.0.
AUTHORS
Robert N M Watson
FreeBSD 10.1 September 4, 2009 FreeBSD 10.1